von Göler (Hrsg.) / Ulrich Schnelle / § 16

§ 16 Legal status following change in shareholders or extent of participation; purchase from non-authorised persons

(1) In the event of a change in the person of a shareholder or the extent of that person’s participation, the owner, in relation to the company, of a share is deemed to be only whoever has been included as such in the list of shareholders entered in the Commercial Register (section 40). A legal act performed by the transferee in relation to the company is deemed effective from the outset if the list is entered in the Commercial Register without delay after performance of the legal act.

(2) The transferee as well as the transferor are held liable in respect of obligations to pay capital contributions which are overdue at the point in time from which the transferee is deemed, in relation to the company, to be the owner of the share pursuant to subsection (1) sentence 1.

(3) The transferee may effectively acquire a share or a right in a share from a non-authorised person by legal transaction if the transferor has been named as the owner of the share in the list of shareholders entered in the Commercial Register. This does not apply if, at the time of the purchase, the list was incorrect in respect of the share for no more than three years and the incorrectness cannot be attributed to the person entitled. Further, a purchase in good faith cannot be made if the transferee is aware of the lack of authorisation or is unaware of the lack of authorisation as a consequence of gross negligence or if an objection to the list has been entered. The objection is entered on the basis of an interim order or on the basis of the approval of that person against whose authorisation the objection has been raised. A threat to the right of the person raising the objection need not be substantiated.

Table of contents
Expert Notes for Legal Professionals
Table of contents
1) Allgemeines

Section 16 GmbHG contains three regulatory sections concerned with entering the (new) shareholder in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register pursuant to sec. 40 and thus makes certain aspects of the acquisition of shares dependent on being recorded in the list of shareholders. Paragraphs 1 and 2 relate to the relationship between the company and the shareholder. Pursuant to paragraph 1, only a person who is entered in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register is considered to be a shareholder in relation to the company and this is, in principle, independent of the legal position under substantive law. Pursuant to paragraph 2, the person entered in this list is liable alongside the person previously recorded for obligations which are overdue in respect of the

2) Definitionen

a) Legal effect of the entry in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register (section 16 I 1)

aa) Changes in the person of a shareholder:

This relates to every change of shareholder. It can take the form of singular succession by way of transfer pursuant to sec. 15 III GmbHG, which also covers a transfer for security or trust purposes and also acquisition by way of forfeiture pursuant to sec. 21 or abandon pursuant to sec. 27 and by the company itself. There is also a change of shareholder in the event of universal succession, for instance by way of devolution of an inheritance pursuant to sec. 1922 BGB, transfer by reorganisation pursuant to the German Reorganisation of Companies Act (Umwandlungsgesetz (UmwG)), accrual under sec. 738 I 1 BGB or creation of a matrimonial property regime under sec. 1426 I 1 BGB; changes of shareholders also encompass, however, all changes to the person of the shareholder without succession, for instance by way of a change of legal form. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, (footnote no. 6 above), section 40 margin no. 6a; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 85 ff.; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 7 

bb) Change in the extent of the participation:

This relates, in particular, to a change in the participating interest without a change of shareholder, for instance by combining or dividing shares or by capital measures, including an increase in capital by issuing shares to new shareholders; it is, however, also frequently associated with a change of shareholder, for instance in the event of the transfer of part of a share or if there is a change in capital through the redemption of a share pursuant to sec. 34. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), sec. 40 margin no. 7; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 90; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 8 

cc) List of shareholders:

Lists of shareholders are covered which have been recorded in the commercial register because of changes in the person of a shareholder or in the extent of his participation, just as lists of shareholders are covered which have been recorded on the occasion of a company formation. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 8; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 20; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above) margin no. 30 The list of shareholders can be compiled as a simple list of shareholders by a managing director pursuant to sec. 40 I, as a qualified list of shareholders by a notary pursuant to sec. 40 II and in the form of the model protocol provided for in the Act pursuant to sec. 2 Ia 4. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 52 

dd) Recorded in the commercial register:

The list of shareholders submitted is recorded in the commercial register without the court of registration conducting an examination as to whether the content thereof is correct and it is thus filed in the register file determined for the respective register sheet (sec. 9 I Commercial Register Ordinance (HRV)), it can then be accessed on the Internet. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 59 

The precondition for the legitimation effect of subsection I is that the change to the list of shareholders and the submission thereof to the commercial register is effected by the competent persons or by the notary who was involved in the change to be recorded or otherwise by the managing director(s), who become(s) active upon receiving notification and evidence of the change. Granting power of attorney is possible; it is of no consequence if the board of management acts instead of the notary or vice versa and similarly if there is no notarial certification. MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 67 f.; Wicke, GmbHG, 2 Edition (2011), § 16 margin no. 9 The notification of the change in the group of shareholders can be contested as an act similar to a business transaction and revoked pending submission of the amended list. BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 13 

Although legal acts of this type are provisionally ineffective from the beginning, they are considered to be effective ex tunc if the amended list of shareholders is recorded in the commercial register without undue delay after performance of the legal act, provided that the ineffectiveness is solely based on the lack of legitimacy pursuant to subsec. I 1. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz, 20th Edition (2013), section 16 margin no. 18; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 36; /MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 142 If the list is not recorded without undue delay, however, the legal act becomes definitively ineffective. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 36; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 144 The reference back does not only apply to the legally effective acquisition, but also to acquisition by inheritance or under company reorganisation law. MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 142; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 50 

bb) Recording of the amended list of shareholders without undue delay:

The recording must be effected without culpable delay pursuant to sec. 121 BGB. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 37 In accordance with the purpose of the provision and the legal concept embodied in sec. 167 ZPO, it is only culpable delay with regard to the notification and evidence of the change and submission of the list of shareholders which is of relevance, but not, however, culpable delay by the judge of the court of registration, whose behaviour is not imputable to the transferee. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 37; Scholz/Seibt, Kommentar zum GmbH-Gesetz, 11th Edition (2014 et seqq.), section 16 margin no. 47 

If the transfer of a share is subject to a condition precedent, in principle it is not possible to amend the list of shareholders and submit it to the commercial register until after the condition has been satisfied; accordingly, the reference back to the legitimation effect only applies to legal acts which were carried out after the condition was satisfied. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 38; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 145 

In practice, the uncertainties associated with the requirement of without undue delay can be avoided by the transferor consenting to the legal acts or by his conferring power of attorney on the transferee to exercise the shareholder rights. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 132; MüKo GmbHG/Heidinger, (footnote no. 8 above), margin no. 146; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 40 

The legal acts pursuant to subsec. I 2 also include appointing a managing director. This is provisionally ineffective first of all, however. Upon the retroactive effectiveness of the appointment of the managing director, his legal acts also become retroactively effective. Once the amended list of shareholders has been recorded, the previous managing directors are effectively withdrawn retroactively, their acts do not, however, become retroactively ineffective. Roth/Altmeppen/Altmeppen, Gesetz betreffend die gesellschaftlich beschränkte Haftung (GmbHG), Commentary, 8th Edition (2012), sec. 16 margin no. 8 

N.B.: In practice, due to the uncertainties that exist, it is advisable for the previous managing director to consent to the acts of the new managing director whose appointment is provisionally ineffective or to grant him power of attorney. BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 57 

c) Liability for overdue performance (section 16 II)

aa) Performance that is overdue:

The liability of the transferee does not only cover obligations for contributions but also differential liability (“Differenzhaftung”, liability for a shortfall in the value of a contribution in kind and the nominal value of the share subscribed to), liability for impairment of capital (“Unterbilanzhaftung”), liability for economic corporate reorganisation (“Haftung wegen wirtschaftlicher Neugründung”), obligations to pay additional contributions pursuant to sec. 26 et seqq. and for other obligations pursuant to sec. 3 II and default liability under sections 22, 24, 28 and 31 III. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 37; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 52; Wicke, GmbHG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 12 

bb) Overdue:

Performance is overdue if it is due and has not been performed. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 44; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 142; Wicke, GmbHG (footnote no. 14), margin no. 12 The due date for the minimum contribution is determined by law in sections 7 II and III and 56 (a) GmbHG, otherwise it is determined in accordance with the articles of association, the underlying shareholders’ resolution or in accordance with a separate requirement by management. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 142; Wicke, GmbHG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 12 

cc) Transferee:

The transferee is the person who, in accordance with subsec. I 1, is entered in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 23; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 43 As such, he is liable for the performance which fell due or was overdue during his entry in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register and this still applies even if his name is no longer entered in the current list in the commercial register, then it applies as transferor, however.

A bogus transferee is, in principle, also to be treated as transferee with all rights and obligations, to the extent that the legitimation effect of subsec. I 1 applies. Wicke, GmbHG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 12a; presumably also: Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 24 

The authoritative point of time for liability is the date on which the changed list of shareholders is recorded in the commercial register. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 23; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbHG-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 43; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 145 

The transferor and transferee are liable for overdue contributions as joint and several debtors. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 23; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 45; Wicke, GmbHG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 12 

d) Acquisition in good faith (section 16 III)

aa) Subject matter of an acquisition in good faith:

This relates to shares or parts thereof. It must, however, relate to a share that actually exists. Newly conferred rights to a share that actually exists can also be acquired in good faith, for instance a pledge of a right by legal transaction pursuant to sec. 1274 BGB or usufruct pursuant to sec. 1068 BGB. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 87; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 57 

The legal transaction must always be a so-called Verkehrsgeschäft, e.g. a transfer pursuant to sec. 15 III, a pledge or creation of usufruct. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 30 The legal transaction must be effective. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 64 The term Verkehrsgeschäft means that at least one person on the transferee side may not be imputable to the transferor side, i.e. that the transferors and transferees are not identical, whereby they may not be economically identical either. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 31; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 66; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3 above), margin no. 83 

cc) Acquisition from non-authorised persons:

The good faith must relate to the substantive authorisation, i.e. to the transferor’s ownership of the right and not to the authority to dispose of the share. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 56; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 242 

Non-authorisation pre-supposes an existing share; shares that do not exist cannot be acquired in good faith. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88; Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 28; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 58; Michalski/Ebbing, (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 246 A share transferred subject to a condition precedent cannot be acquired in good faith by a second transferee before the condition has been satisfied pursuant to sec. 161 III BGB in conjunction with sec. 16 III, since the list of shareholders does not evidence the ostensible legal existence of the non-existence of a condition precedent. BGH, decision of 20.09.2011, II ZB 17/10, http://juris.bundesgerichtshof.de/cgi-bin/rechtsprechung/document.py?Gericht=bgh&Art=en&sid=6d75ffbb5560afb0919fa3a8c8d3e63f&nr=58010&pos=0&anz=1, NZG 2011, 1268 

dd) No imputability of the incorrect nature to the owner with substantive authorisation:

The incorrect nature is imputable to the person with substantive authorisation if (jointly) arranging for the incorrect nature of the list is imputable to that person or if there is any (joint) responsibility in this respect. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 80; BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88 This does not apply if there are any reasons to exclude imputability, for instance legal incapacity. Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 104 Delays by the court of registration do not lead to imputability; this should also apply to delays by the managing director or notary. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 35; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi, (footnote no. 3) above, margin no. 35 Joint responsibility for the incorrect nature of the list does exist, in particular, if the person with substantive authorisation has knowledge or should have knowledge of the incorrect nature of the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register without his having made any endeavour to submit a corrected list of shareholders or to enter an objection. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 35; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 106 Imputability therefore exists if, after the acquisition of a share, the person with substantive authorisation makes no endeavour to ensure that the list of shareholders is changed and reflects his legal status correctly. There is said to be no imputability if the managing director submits an incorrect list without the knowledge of the shareholder. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 80 

ee) Commencement of the three year period:

The three year period commences when the incorrect list of shareholders is recorded in the commercial register, i.e. in the register file. If the list of shareholders does not become incorrect until a later date, the period commences at that point in time when the list becomes incorrect. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 36; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 79 The lack of imputability only excludes the acquisition from non-authorised persons if the list of shareholders in the commercial register has not yet been incorrect for three years.

ff) Incorrect nature of the list of shareholders:

The person with substantive authorisation with respect to the share in question is not entered in the list. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 78 The incorrect nature is not interrupted by a changed list of shareholders being recorded in the commercial register which continues the incorrect nature. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88; Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 36; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 78 To this extent it is of no relevance whether it is still the same non-authorised person who is recorded or whether the non-authorised person first recorded transferred the share to another person who has no authorisation who was then recorded. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 78 The incorrect nature does not end until a list is recorded in the commercial register which is correct with regard to the share in question and the incorrect list is replaced; if thereafter an incorrect list is again recorded in the register with regard to the share in question, then the three year period starts to run anew with regard to this share. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 88; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 78 

gg) The transferee’s knowledge of the incorrect nature or lack of knowledge thereof due to gross negligence:

There is no good faith if the transferee knew that there was no authorisation or had no such knowledge due to gross negligence. With regard to the concept of good faith, reference can be made to the principles developed in sec. 932 BGB. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 38; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 67; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 220 The authoritative point in time is, in principle, when the acquisition of the right was completed; in the case of a condition precedent it is the agreement in rem on the transfer, but not, however, in the event of conditions which the parties can influence the satisfaction of. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 68; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6), margin no. 224 

Knowledge exists if the transferee has positive knowledge that the transferor recorded is not the owner of the share, solely knowledge of the facts which the non-authorisation results from does not suffice to this extent. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 221 

There is grossly negligent lack of knowledge if the transferee violates the care required in legal relations to an unusually high degree and fails to heed something which should have been apparent to anyone under the given circumstances. BGH NJW 2005, 1365; Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 38; Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 67; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 222

hh) Entering an objection:

An objection is entered by analogy with sec. 899 II BGB based on the consent of the person recorded or based on an interim order. BegrRegE BR-Drs. 354/07, 89 It is entered in the commercial register by the objection being combined in the register file with the contested list of shareholders and the following lists in such a way that the lists cannot be retrieved without the objection, whereby the objection must clearly show which entries in the list it addresses. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 70; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 89 ff.; Wicke, GmbhG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 24a) 

ii) Approval of the objection:

The objection is approved by the person recorded as the owner of the respective share in the list of shareholders. It is a unilateral declaration of intent which must be received by the addressee to be effective and it must be made to the person applying for the objection to be entered or to the court of registration. Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 227 The court of registration examines the formal effectiveness of the approval of the recorded owner, but not the substantive authorisation of the person filing the objection. Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 227 

The legal consequences of an acquisition in good faith from a non-authorised person pursuant to subsection III are the acquisition of the share and of the shareholder status thus procured or of a right in rem to it, for instance of a usufruct or pledge right, and a respective loss of rights of the person truly authorised. A purchase back by the non-authorised person from the transferee in good faith is effective insofar as it is not based on the subsequent elimination of the transfer; however, in the relation to the person with the original substantive authorisation it leads to a transfer obligation under the law of obligations. Baumbach/Hueck/Hueck/Fastrich, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 16 above), margin no. 39 f. In principle, the person truly authorised who loses his right through the acquisition in good faith from the non-authorised person, has no claims for compensation against the transferee in good faith; the transferee in good faith is only liable if the acquisition is gratuitous pursuant to sec. 816 I 2 BGB, a third-party recipient for no charge is liable in accordance with sec. 822 BGB. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 81; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 107 

The person truly authorised can, however, be entitled under the law of obligations to acquisition claims against the unauthorised person disposing of the share, in particular for restitution of what was obtained through unjust enrichment pursuant to secs. 816, 822 BGB, under certain circumstances, also pursuant to secs. 681, 687 II BGB or for tort pursuant sec. 823 et seqq. BGB. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 81; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above), margin no. 107; Wicke, GbmHG (footnote no. 14 above), margin no. 26 

3) Abgrenzungen, Kasuistik

a) Legitimation effect of recording the list of shareholders in the commercial register

Through the legitimation effect embodied in the provision of subsec. I 1, that person who is entered as shareholder in the list of shareholders recorded in the commercial register is deemed to be the shareholder in relation to the company and this applies independently of his substantive authorisation; this is also referred to as the formal status of shareholder. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 19; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 23

The fact that the company has positive knowledge of the absence of substantive authorisation does not oppose the legitimation effect. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6), margin no. 20; Michalski/Ebbing, GmbHG (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 51; BeckOK GmbHG/Wilhelmi,

4) Zusammenfassung der Rechtsprechung

With regard to the fundamental procedural questions, reference can be made to the presentation of the jurisdiction made in 4) above.

a) Legitimation effect

The shareholder of a GmbH is not dependent on having a judicial assessment of his legitimation in relation to the GmbH. This is determined by section 16 I GmbHG. With respect to action aiming at acknowledgement of a shareholder’s legal position pursuant to section 256 I ZPO, there is therefore no interest in having the legal relationship established. Action for interim acknowledgement pursuant to section 256 II ZPO can be admissible, however, as has been confirmed by OLG Hamm in a specific case. OLG Hamm, judgment of 16.04.2014 – 8 U 82/13, NZG 2014, 783 (784) = GmbHR 2014, 935 = ZIP 2014, 1479 

b)

5) Literaturstimmen

The main discussions in legal literature relating to the interpretation of certain elements of section 16 are set forth below on those subjects on which jurisdiction has not yet – as far as can be seen – expressed an opinion.

a) Question relating to recording the amended list of shareholders in the commercial register without undue delay

According to one opinion expressed in literature, culpable delay is only considered to be detrimental with regard to the notification and evidence of the change and submission of the list of shareholders to the commercial register, but not the culpable delay of the judge of the court of registration, whose behaviour is not imputable to the transferee. Lutter/Hommelhoff/Bayer, GmbH-Gesetz (footnote no. 6 above), margin no. 37; Scholz/Seibt, GmbHG (footnote no. 20 above),

6) Häufige Paragraphenketten

The chains of clauses where section 16 GmbHG frequently appears are in conjunction with section 15 and with the formal provisions relating to the list of shareholders of section 40 GmbHG.

7) Anmerkungen

Section 16 GmbHG does not satisfy the high expectations of legal relations – especially as far as the possibility of acquisition in good faith of GmbH shares is concerned. This is primarily due to the fact that the point of reference is to the list of shareholders as the basis for imputability. A list of shareholders is of itself manipulable, however, and it does not, for example, enjoy the public credence of the land register within the meaning of sec. 885 BGB.

The provision embodied in section 16 I 2 GmbHG, which was actually intended to simplify the situation for a transferee whose name has not yet been entered in the list or with respect to whom the list has not yet been recorded in the commercial register, carries

Author & Law firm
Dr. Ulrich Schnelle, Rechtsanwalt im Gesellschaftsrecht in Stuttgart
Dr. Ulrich Schnelle, attorney-at-law
US@Haver-Mailaender.de +49 7 11 / 2 27 44 27

Managing partner, lawyer since 1992

Ulrich Schnelle specializes in European and German antitrust law, in particular in antitrust proceedings, in merger control, on issues of abuse of a dominant position and in contract antitrust law. He also advises domestic and foreign companies on corporate law, M&A transactions and distribution law. He also represents clients before authorities and courts at home and abroad in all areas of law that he works on. A special focus of Ulrich Schnelle is advising on cross-border mandates, in particular for clients from the English-speaking area, from Western and Southern Europe and Asia.

Ulrich Schnelle studied law at the Universities of Passau, Geneva, Freiburg im Breisgau (there also Dr. iur.) And at the University of Illinois, USA, where he obtained the title of Master of Laws (LL.M.). The stays abroad and the doctorate were made possible by grants from various organizations, in particular the DAAD. During his studies he was a research assistant at the chair for comparative law and international private law at the University of Freiburg. He is a member of various antitrust and other interest groups and supervisory bodies as well as a speaker at specialist events. Ulrich Schnelle publishes regularly on antitrust law and corporate law. He speaks English, French and Russian.

HAVER & MAILÄNDER

RA Dr. Ulrich Schnelle
Lenzhalde 83-85
70192 Stuttgart
Tel: +49 7 11 / 2 27 44 27
US@Haver-Mailaender.de

Profile of the law firm

HAVER & MAILÄNDER was formed in 1965 from the cooperation between Dr. Friedrich Haver († 1976) and Dr. K. Peter Mailänder. Today, we are a law firm of over 30 lawyers and one of the few medium-sized firms in Germany with national and international renown.

Our clients' entrepreneurial activity abroad and cross-border transactions of all kinds naturally lead to encounters with foreign legal systems, for instance when setting up a branch or subsidiary abroad, when purchasing or merging with another company, in the export business, in the event of disputes on trademark or patent infringements or in case of product liability. Incidents of this nature frequently necessitate advice on foreign law. Naturally we accompany our clients here too.

About the author:

Partner, Attorney at law since 1992
Ulrich Schnelle focuses largely on European and German antitrust law, in particular on antitrust proceedings, merger control, questions of the abuse of a dominant position in a market and antitrust-related contract law (recommended for antitrust law in Legal 500 2012/13). He further advises national and international companies on corporate law, on M&A transactions and distribution law. In all of the legal fields Ulrich Schnelle practises in he also represents clients before authorities and at court both in Germany and abroad. One of his particular specialisations is counselling clients on cross border operations, especially clients from English-speaking countries, from western and southern Europe and Asia.
Ulrich Schnelle studied law at the universities of Passau, Geneva, Freiburg im Breisgau (where he also obtained his doctorate in law) and at the University of Illinois, USA, where he was awarded the title of Master of Laws (LL.M.). His study periods abroad and doctorate degree were made possible by scholarships from various organisations, including the DAAD in particular. Whilst studying at university he also worked as an academic assistant at the Department of Comparative Law and International Conflict of Laws of the University of Freiburg. He is a member of various antitrust and other professional associations and supervisory boards and also lectures at professional conferences. Ulrich Schnelle regularly publishes articles on antitrust law and corporate law. He speaks English, French and Russian.

Practice areas
Intellectual Property
Compliance
Mergers & Acquisitions
Corporate law
Construction Law, Corporate Law
Int. Wirtschaftsrecht
Intern.business transactions
Öffentliches Recht
Public Business Law
Employment & Equalities
European Law
Private Equity
Sports Law
Insurance
Insolvency Law
Datenschutz
Arbitration, Litigation
Commercial
Restructuring
Int. Schadensrecht
IT Law
Ehevertrag
Family Law
Banking & Finance
Banking Law
Arbeitsrecht
Labour Law
Strategic orientation

As a medium-sized group of highly-qualified lawyers with economic expertise and other certified specialisations, we pursue a different concept from that of giant law firms. We consider ourselves to be a closely-meshed network of lawyers, organised as partners in a 'law boutique' with an absolute focus on our clients and their interests. Our advice is highly personal and individual, target-oriented and success-related. Our clients are each under the responsibility of one partner who is personally available as the constant point of contact. We always take an overall and concentrated view of problems.

Offices & lawyers

Dresden, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Brussels

Strategic Alliances

The Law Firm Network

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§ 15 Transfer of shares
Next Clause
Section 17 (repealed)
Footnotes